Violence Against Women in the Military.

PositionBrief Article - Statistical Data Included

Factors within the military workplace environment are significantly associated with the risk of non-fatal physical and sexual assault toward women in the armed forces, according to University of Iowa and Iowa City Veterans Affairs Medical Center (VAMC) researchers. The study, involving more than 500 female veterans, finds that environmental factors such as the behavior of superior officers may promote violence toward women and were highly associated with whether or not those in the military were assaulted during their time of service.

"With more than one-half million females serving in the U.S. Department of Defense, military women are an important population from which to learn more about women in the workplace and the consequences of violence," notes Anne Sadler, a registered nurse and researcher at the Iowa City VAMC, who designed and headed the study. Bradley Doebbeling, associate professor of internal medicine and epidemiology and a staff physician and researcher at the VAMC, says the environmental risk factors for assault found in this study seem to be comparable to risk factors in nonmilitary settings. "This suggests that, if harassment is allowed in the workplace, it predisposes women in those environments to assault."

The researchers interviewed 537 women veterans nationwide who served in the Vietnam, post-Vietnam, and Persian Gulf War eras. Participants completed an extensive structured interview to determine socioeconomic and environmental factors associated with victimization and its consequences while in the military. Seventy-nine percent reported experiences of sexual harassment during their military service; 54%, unwanted sexual contact; 21%, physical violence solely within the context of rape; and 36%, threatened or completed physical...

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